Lithuania Witnesses a Slight Increase in Brute-Force Attacks
Through the previous 14-day period, the number of brute-force attacks in Lithuania increased compared to the last fortnight. According to information from Windows servers secured by Syspeace, there was an escalation of 18 percent in brute-force attacks per server. However, there was a big drop of 25 percent in the whole world.
The amount of attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers increased slightly throughout the last fortnight in Lithuania as 580 automated hacking attempts per Windows servers were logged by Syspeace. That means the brute-force attacks went up slightly by 18 percent. The number of brute-force attacks blocked by Syspeace in Lithuania was 580.
For a comparison, Denmark and Australia have been under increased attacks. With 600 blocked brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured server the previous 14 days, Denmark has seen a rise of 18 percent in comparison with the last fortnight. In Australia, the sum total has climbed up by 18 percent to 410 automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured server.
The attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers have shown a big decline all around the world. Simply put, Lithuania is going against the flow. There have been 25 percent less automated hacking attempts in the world on Windows servers secured by Syspeace in the past two weeks compared to the two weeks prior. Up until now, this year there have been 1,100 brute-force attacks per Syspeace-secured server in the world. The brute-force attacks have grown by 43 percent on a year-to-year comparison. That is to say, the amount of brute-force attacks blocked by Syspeace in the world was 780,000.
The evidence is provided by Syspeace, a company that helps fight automated hacking attempts. Syspeace saves firms time, effort, and money by blocking attacks that otherwise take many hours of repetitive, manual labor to find and prevent. Syspeace monitors all the global Syspeace-secured Windows Servers carefully. The company is a global trailblazer on the topic since 2012, having collected and analyzed information on automated hacking attempts.
During the automated hacking attempt, an attacker submits many passwords or passphrases, hoping to eventually get them right. Each and every possible password and passphrase is systematically inspected to find the right one.
To keep trouble out and block automated hacking attempts, Syspeace offers software that safeguards companies from IT theft, combined with outstanding customer support.